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Shloka 15

सोमवर्णनम्

Graha–Ratha–Aśva Varṇana, Dhruva-Nibaddha Gati, Maṇḍala-Pramāṇa, Graha-Arcana

विस्तारान्मण्डलाच्चैव पादहीनस्तयोर्बुधः तारानक्षत्ररूपाणि वपुष्मन्तीह यानि वै

vistārānmaṇḍalāccaiva pādahīnastayorbudhaḥ tārānakṣatrarūpāṇi vapuṣmantīha yāni vai

ทั้งในด้านความกว้างและวงมณฑล บูธะ (พุธ) กล่าวว่าขาดไปหนึ่งปาทะจากสองมาตรานั้น; และที่นี่กล่าวถึงรูปอันมีสรีระซึ่งปรากฏเป็นดาวและนักษัตรทั้งหลายด้วย।

विस्तारात्from the expanse/extent
विस्तारात्:
मण्डलात्from the circle/orb (celestial sphere)
मण्डलात्:
च एवand indeed
च एव:
पाद-हीनःlacking a quarter (one pāda less)
पाद-हीनः:
तयोःof those two (measures/standards mentioned)
तयोः:
बुधःBudha, Mercury
बुधः:
ताराstars
तारा:
नक्षत्रlunar mansions/constellations
नक्षत्र:
रूपाणिforms
रूपाणि:
वपुष्मन्तिpossessing bodies/embodied
वपुष्मन्ति:
इहhere (in this cosmos/teaching)
इह:
यानिwhich
यानि:
वैindeed/assuredly
वै:

Suta Goswami

B
Budha

FAQs

By describing the ordered measures of the celestial maṇḍala and the embodied star-forms, the verse supports a key Shaiva view: the universe is a regulated manifestation under Pati (Shiva). Linga worship aligns the pashu (individual soul) with that cosmic order, reducing pasha (bondage) through right contemplation and ritual focus.

Though Shiva is not named directly, the teaching implies Shiva-tattva as the supreme regulator behind measurable cosmic structures—grahas, stars, and nakṣatras—whose patterned manifestation reflects intelligent governance. In Shaiva Siddhanta terms, the world is real and ordered, yet ultimately dependent on Pati’s sovereignty.

The verse points to dhyāna on cosmic order (graha–nakṣatra–maṇḍala) as a support for Pāśupata-oriented discipline: using contemplation of structured creation to cultivate viveka and vairāgya, thereby weakening pasha while remaining devoted to Shiva as the inner ruler.